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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 12 March 1915, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1915-03-12/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
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It is often been said that good cows mean only half of the game and of course to obtain good stock, one must begin with the bull. The bull is one•half the herd. The importance of this can be hardly overestimated. Mr. N. T. Wilson, who haa made a success with a very fine herd of Jerseys Rear Belt, has at my request brought out a few good points in his own ex- perience, which in his own words up• year . as follows: \When I was asked to prepare a pa- per On the above subject my first im- pulse was to say no a6 it is very hard for me to get time necessary for same but taking the second thought I felt It was my duty to do what IRO& I could to help make this meeting a success, as I feel as though we have been very fortunate in getting this meeting here in Belt this time. sure we will be able to profit largely by it. I have nothing new or strange to tell yeti of how I or rather we selected out my present dairy herd. In the spring of 1908 my son Rry and H. E. not get one with a defect of any kind. Will say that all matte good here, some are better than others yet we had no star boarders in the lot. We had cows from 10 years old down to 18 months. I think for any one who could wait for their - heifers are the t patisfactory buy. Our bemil authorit ies make the statement that tile Sire is of much greater importanee than the female of the herd. Belies ing this to is- true, we took great pains in select ing a pure bred, registered sire that w , believed would give an improvement in our herd front the start. Unfort via'..ely we lost hint in Portland when ,nlir herd a is 111Wrirll I in l'•••t ed. W- it o others. We had bought anoth • . is ii to he .4 toed e reetstered. ee used him. mu.: a as the g temii 'ci v, r on we purrhc • d eure lured eire : i to a world's i co, sanely and we it is have sow pnituising younggter• coming on from him on which we have great t•xpectia• tions. tVe also, at the same time pur chased four registered females one oi which we lost in collision in transit 1Vood and myself were in southern ‘Ve expedt eventually to work Mt( Oregon having gone there with the in• al dl registered stock. These have prov tention of locating there. We decide. d to be very persietatit producers o to come back to Montana also to brie; alk.Yielding a good heavy tiercentag, a car of cows with us. We had bee f butter fat. We have not given on over the country pietty thoroughly an ock a, good a show as we should t , knew about where to look for them We all started out and went to huyin so that a portion of the cows in thi car was selected by each of us 11'e ha, eone of li d had any special training in selecting dairy stock. We scarcely knee the difference between the dairy and beef types. If we admit that type in the dairy cow means anything and that grwrations of work in selecting and mating with the definite object in view means anything, surely we would do better to confine our selection to one of the dairy breeds that had been sel- ected and mated in this manner, our dm testa to get what would prove pro- fitable dairy rows would be better than to buy any sort of a cow that might Lve them do their best. Having na ve grubs pasture. say six months, an , Ifalfe straight for the balance of tle ear. They have given us very good ,rotit at that. Think it will show nj cry favorably with the sem , . amount if labor and capital in any other branch if farming besides being less risk of 065 by the elements. Alto) set ing all he fertilizers fro mcorps to return ti' the ground which is worth a great deal. tVe have warm and comfortable guar - i tem for cows in winter end put them in as soon as the weather gets to cold ;for their comfort outside, and keep them in until they can get a god bit of • n-ree grass in the spring. We It•t them out twice a day for water whit•li is look good to us. We bought from gumped up fresh for them from a well several different parties , . Of course we which is 75 feet deep. This gives them had to select limn what they were temperature and not too cold for their willing to sell, naturally we did not ex- comfort, which I ecnsider quite impor- pect them to offer us the pick of the tant. prevenient I 1411). A . (tom two soun t- tirmt by the itYe of pure bred sire, ii listinetly dairy strains, we would et feet a change in the general chariest of the dairy stock of the whole er munity. Improved feeding method -11 g. ;land in hand with the first. We b, eke at the present that more burned late benefit could be accomplished y. 'lounge in thi s respect than other as it would - aboll immediate resulta in tb. pail und that alawy, intereets us.\ -1: A. Blowhard. ROY HAMMOND DUDLEY Born August 12, 1872. at Greenlee' Minnesota. ilied Mari•li 7, 1915 at NVarin .;pritigs. NIont. 11,;.vliood . days woo 4 punt at Litelith•lil and Aeroka, Whet'. he attended :wilted. At fifteen years if age he moved with his parents le 'buffalo. Minn.. where lie lived for ses• ral ytiers. He was a printer by trade ind held responsible positions at Mon. ice -lb. /buffalo, Minneapolis rind Hut bintion, Minn. Sept. 211, I9011 he wa married to Celia Drew, of lititchinan 1 eolith Ihilkota. Clentoie l'emple Masotti, atter at St. l'aul. The [uncivil aervicea 4c1t. ender the auspiees of the M a s o n a turedey, Match ninth, Bet. ilyeit o •t. l'sill EON:opal ellitn•li of Butte of iciat ing. The sympathy of the entire eon) :amity is extended to the bereaved wife ad son. SUTER sups ONE OVER doe Novak, the wrestler who has is lied a challenge through the column the Gazette to Otto Suter; ette.tinat titer weight ehamPlon of tbr wOr1 nd now living on '•. hOlnestrad neqi ovine, l e given a bard rap in a It er from the Larina Athletic associa ion to the Gazette. The letter fol Vii)R . Mon., March 190. Joe Notak. who came through her, to time ago elaiming to be a wrest !er,in conducting a self praising earn paign in Billings it the expense of th .5'. ins Athletic association and Mr liter, of Entry. Mr. Sitter has never tried to witt. told hi a identity from anyone here or is/A; here, as far as we know. The num thdereim came by him in the followin manner: Novek dropped into town on dunk Left the printing busiuess and lay and ',timid himself with the sti corked as a glove cutter in Iltitchin nouncentent that he could throw on factory. Aftersards returned to three men in forty minute». At thi , tr• newspaper bitsineem. buying the last s ll i ll Mn. Suter was induced it - Journal at White Hoek. South Ihtkota. some do'.'. ii from hie horueelead art - le lived there erven years then siill oiteet the a intl joiner. Novak, in hie- tid botigth tlie Herald at Ortonville, lengthy articles in the Billings papers Minn. Aftr two years sold and came stated that he knew Suter from th, o t;e3 ser and bought the Geys.a - Tinit.s. east. ‘Vell. he didn't, for when Suter Mr. Dudley cante to Geyser in Ni,'.., mine into the room Novak; asked who 1912 and took charge of the Times. He ,the man was, when someime in the wa, the mean.; of -moving the Times; crowd answered \Anderson 4 and that tom its smell home at that time to has been hiP nickname ever since, al the new, large, modern building which though he was called Suter several times' Was erected by him. Ile ale - aye pub- ,right in the presence of the world's belied a good. elean, progreasive paper would•be, welterweight champion. ` and one which has been it credit to 111.'4 In the first. match here Novak eaw town. As a citizen of Geyser, Mr. Dr ut•tt h itat' he itirim more chance than • nab• ley. non the respect and regard of all. ,bit. altotigh he put up all kinds of es• 114. aas ibarilable to a fault. Was R (Ivies about his eondition. which wa• ectisistent wiirker for the welfare of 1 ;eyser and in his is -teeing our (0%'. it Jos. es one a its hest citizens. II is survived by a e•ife and One son inine years old. him mother, NIrs. Hose one sister, Mrs. .1. E. Liindri• ! min both of Car,. Lake, Minn. Moll a hroth4't 1Villi5 of St. Cloud. Mimi. uuIci !Mather Dean of Ciizalr. etts a 32 -degree holding meinbcrehip to White Rock, South Ihdoita. Milhenk, Dress Goods Season after Season a large majority of discriminating women have depended and wisely on this store for their needs in dress mater- ials. Our stock is always selected with great care, but this year we feel better satisfied than ever before. Below we mention a few of the many weaves we are now of- fering. Gaberdines, crepe meteor, charmeuse, wool crepes and foulards. Weaves that you'll want, the newest, handsomest that looms anywhere have turned out and all are desirable and .reas- onable. We keep everything you expect to find and many things you never expected. iperwmonawlemweamenemeseesee COUGHLIN BROS. & CO. Yours for Quality and Rig ht Prices .•••••• .as goo.1 RA it could be. After being throun he said be wanted another chance at Sitter and offered a fifty eide bet that he could throw him. A match was arrankei1, the winner to take all the gate receipts. IAThen the :eroWd iv,,, ,seinhied Norm k refused to •gti cii tlw mat miles, lie got half the ,itioney. Mr. Seiler eel %s idling to di. - the criovil agreed tit this, but ever our signature we will state that the aspirant to the world's champion - chip noel' received such a pummeling • in his allot. , life it, he revels ett that ; i all•bearers, six young men who bore h remains and six young ladies who rere honorary pall -bearers. A large ,oncourse of friends, besides the rela• Ins& followed her to bet last netting place. The bereaved family have the sym• 'lathy of the entire community. Weeping friends, and filen& earresaing, Tend to melt and soothe the heart ; %Viten this changeful life is over, And our (hiding ones depart. BASKET BALL GAME The basket ball game was a bril Bent success for Stanford, Unfortunate- ly one of the Geyser star players we, unable to be with the boys and con- sequently owing to this and a few othes difficulties the game was made a walk• f tway for Stanford. The hall is much wailer than the Geyser boys are in the habit of playing in. Grady did ex- cellent work and it did 'teem like the realization of a huge dream to see him handle the hall. However, as the basket unfortunately end incessantly prreieted in swavItip 4o and mu c‘er thr four hi' four that projected at thin bottom. Lamm was there all the tune and es, skillful enough to land the ball at the right time. Losing the game three not lead us to think that the Geyser boys are Rol pla.sing good ball. We know that they can do ries-Aleut work and ai the present time are getting ready for a big ;TN nie. Geyser Posit ion Stanford Lamm V. F. Gay lord Belli not p Proper i night. Ile eten beggegi hii Opp O i rl 414•11•1•11.0 •••••••••• (411 wilaY evetsime, March 71h, being cen• ael0416 to the said. She received her last saeransea& fobr times from Bishop XI. C. Leaden), silo, with her mother, was at her Itedisitie wh'kuhte messed Keay. Anita was a Nit* (+vertu] and af• ‘ectionate girl end , a - as loved by all .vho knelve her. ' - telte leaves a Either, leather, sit brethren and three sister* n Mourn her untimely death, all of e - honi followed her to her last resting t'seept her brother Fred, who had .,ein - peil to South Dakota about a week She was given a boautiful burial. Iler tike :WSW white brocaded velvet end 'le flora . ' tribilles were meny and beau -1 he -spoke the esteem in which 4111. wa s held by her acquaintancen the dirt taut during milking time. All milk utensils may be kept clean by the of a brush and as solution of soda l followed by • final rinsing iii scalding water. If lee i not possible for ode termer i3 it not feasible for several fartnere to combine their interests, and /secure a supply of ice at some central place at a reasonable cost. I hope the readera of this paper are not superior to germs. If you are, vend for sonic of the Government liter- ature an the subject of the care of ' milk. A request to ,the Bureau of Ag- tieulture will bring A numbvr of bullet- ins to your door, much to your enlight, The grave wa, lined wittt white, and enuaeut. decorated with evergreens and earns - ions. The officiating, Father Thos. MALE FARMING A GOOD GAME l'aitaisine, read a requiem mass and spoke many encouraging words to the • B* 1 \ 1 \ M o ntana. March n- - Organ - e.reated tamily. There were twelvt• i•aatfcm of chubs among boys and girls to stimulate interest in the esindament- jil work of the farm and farm home ts being promoted In Montana by no i lea s important sponsqrs than the gov- ' t endosent of the UniVel States and the state of Montana working in cooper. ition. This method of agrit•ultusif ,promotion looks far to the future, butt the immediate results justify great es- peetations. Some of the most remark - ' able results in et -op production on re- cord have been made by young bops in ( tome of the older elutes, under the guidance of versatile Upcle Sam. This work is represented in Montana by Miss Augusta Evans, employed jointly by the federal department of agriculture and the extonsion depart- ment of the Montana State college, who gives her whole time to Montana. She has been employed here for about six months. Each club is organised under the misers' direction of some adult local leader, usually a school teacher, an el : perlenced farmer or housewife, but tiVe. club elects its own oaken and conducts I r a own business, vs tih its own station- ery, tater& eta The club' are organ- ieed * with various definite purposes. and prise s for excellence are offered to the members, home are called corn clubs, the purpose being to stimulate interest in raising corn in Montana; and each ioernber egress to raise one acre of corn, foilowiug the directions 'sent out by the State College experts. In the ; potato elute the boys raise each • third of an acre of potatoes. In the clubs for girls they raise a tenth, of an acre of garden vegetables, each; sell fresh vegetables, furnish them for their C. L. F. Eliteroft Grady Skull on I.. G. Linna tie lines him a hial oitt of his mie- directions sent out by the State college. L. 0. nenderion ery. Buckner In each one of these cases, the boys fteteiee-Wedde/1. Time-keepre-Brown • 1 Ile mew has Billings ell stirred up m rid Skelton. ' and girls iteeic both for quality and 'vet his ehelkelge, and etipposed abil- quantity in yield, profit in marketing, ;ty, but we will frankly stote that no and make careful study of the pro - FIGHTING FOR PURE MILK , , tte orotund here would gi% • one jitney, 1 ceases involved, upon which they keep By M. M. Carrick, M. D. - 4 cents, to see Novak wrestle Suter in written records. The prizes are award - L So many dramatic disclosures have or anYwhere else. becomee he ed with reference to all these matters, ius heen made in regard to the relation be not got the goods. In potato clubs, for instance, 25 per '‘Yeen il \ Novak savs Suter in 15 pounds the irty milk and the excessiv e cent is allowed for the size of the .heav i er. suser we i gh _ 150 pounds. he -heath rate among intents that fsrmeri. 25 per cent for the financial pro - is a gentleman. every inch of him, and are beginning to realize as never before lit, 25 per cent for the best peck of po- ,ain niake Novak look like 31) cents at the necessity or co-operation with th.• tatoes, and 25 per cent for the best municipal authorities in their fight f 'MY time amid place and no one knows Ga. N eure milk. written account of the potato raiser's this better than Novek.-Billinge experience& The one who rank3 high. Milk is certainly the most impor- zette. rid in these four parts of the work ton artielt• of food in the human die ; . taken together, is the winner of the arc, and it Lalso the most conte min - first prize in hi, club, which is a free OBITUARY n1)10. It it, therefore, up to the farmer trip to the state fair. It becomes our painful duty to this to see that the milk from his diar iteloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theo- a girls , of eh•anlinese a, possible. Not week chronicle the sad death of Anna. gels to the eily in ea reanonabh lore Bohn of this piers.. that this is an dusively baby in Deceased was born at. Ethan, So, Dak., 'dent, for all :orris of diseases are ear March lit Ih, 18h5. , 'lett thanigh milk. Tuberculosis is an In 1911 flue family moved to Shot- example of this rhos, end a numbe: t , m, Colorado, where they resided on a pf epidernies of diphtheria and scarlet farm until September, 1914, when thee fever have been traeed to the milk snip came to Montana, locating twit mike! ply, hut (then we poise to consider that from Geyser. in Cascade county. .1g -fifth of all the hatiie• beon in 111 - On the 29th of last Nov , Alltla United lit al en die in their infamy iron Was taken sick with inflniusfory rlieu pre% ..111 hle dianwara, a ngl tlui t alit v ruutism, as it was gripper-ed. Medieal i s, cent of thc.s. are doe to glistrodii• as..sistance was at Once procured, but ',dine! di -eases. dile I,, iMprupet teed She did not improve. ing or impure milk, we naturally be The fore part of January she was riu to look into the 'anise. taken to Great Falls, where abet re I realize, of course. that every farm eeived Osteopathic treatment for Hire, er hat e his milking done selen- weeks. As her condition alit' seemed unimproved, ahe was takt‘n to the Co tumble , Ilnspitel of that pbice, and Dr. Mai -only look eharge of her A Het entering Ilie ho' -pi tic I it deeideil that she had tuberculosis of the left knee and cancer of the left lung. Slo undenvent two operetions, hot h of which proved et' no atilt'. She bore her suffering with groat fertittule,:oand to the lard tried to eheer up the fenjilv by saying Mal ,-he souk! soon be uelf Ismail cost, All that loving bands could do was Then, theist. ediould he a en -strict pail done to alley fat.' her iii (feting. She in place of Ow old fasliiiitiod side-month paseed AI 14y R ti 0 . 4:101i ed This will keep nine-tenths of iitleally. but it is posotible for him to produce safe milk for his own ume and that of the pnblie by very simple end inespeneile ineans. lie may not bale an elaborate tisirs outfit, bul his rattle can he kept rir..2111 and in perfect health with the semis - lance n1 a veterinars. It will be to his finaneiel interest Iii the long riin. Tar paper, whi‘cwasb antimatle cc mem' will inti;ter a ttonit r ni shin al own homes', aud gen them, following the AN OUNCE OF PREVENTATIVE IS WORTH A TON OF CURE By S. W. Inglish It is said Gust the sword of Damo- cles was suspended shove the head of that tyrant withbut a single thread. - Every man, woman and child ought to think well of the kiloton taught by this example. The fire clernon is the m,arord of dee- t rue( ion that ever ha np,, abut e he rif the people. If .vou knew that hy- the mere snippieg of a thread alt that you had saved would be wiped out, wouldn't you ever be on the alert to see that the thread was not snipped , More property is destroyed by fire than by all other destroying element. eombined. Storms l'Orrie With the tweet - ins. and warning oh their i•orning is generally giten. Winde reach a destinefive vel- ocity at but rare intervals and floods follow expected courses. Rut fires are eatholie in their field - ' .They visit the just and the uniust and everywhere there is food for the. fire demon he finds his victuals. , Be on the watch lower of yonr own horn\ all the time. He fattens on ymir own folly. Von ran prevent his paying you a visit if you but will. les